Today,
I return Senate Bill 1 with specific recommendations for change that will set Illinois
students and schools on a brighter path with a fairer funding system.

This
historic moment will help generations of Illinois children, and reflects the
hard work and recommendations of the bipartisan Illinois School Funding Reform
Commission. The changes submitted to SB 1 prioritize critical education funding
reform and give schools the resources they need to provide the best education
to our students across the state.

As
written, SB 1 aligns in many ways with the Commission’s recommendations. This
includes requiring that every school district receive an individualized
adequacy target reflecting students’ needs and educational best practices; that
every school district receive a local capacity target to guide their local
contributions toward equitable funding; that the distribution of any new funds
prioritize those school districts farthest away from adequacy; and that, as a
matter of student-centered equity, district authorized charter schools receive
funding parity.

Unfortunately,
several provisions within the bill worked against the Commission’s
recommendations and the purpose of providing fair funding for all our students
across the state. Where the Commission unanimously recommended a per-pupil hold
harmless, Senate Bill 1 fixes a per-district hold harmless in perpetuity. By
freezing all districts’ base funding at an arbitrary moment in time, it limits
the state’s ability to reflect fluctuations in enrollment and better target
available money to students in need. Senate Bill 1 includes a regionalization
factor but places an artificial floor on it, driving up costs and exacerbating
our state’s already-significant distance from adequacy. Senate Bill 1 also
establishes an unsustainable minimum funding level that, if not met, triggers a
shift of all new state resources to Tier I districts at the expense of Tier II
districts.

As
written, Senate Bill 1 places the burden of the Chicago Public Schools’ broken
teacher pension system on our rural and suburban school districts through three
major provisions: pick-up of CPS’ normal pension costs, retention of the
so-called Chicago block grant, and a deduction for the CPS unfunded pension
liability. Taken together, these three provisions put Chicago in line for
millions more in funding that are diverted from other, needier districts, thus
going against the Commission recommendation that any additional money be
distributed first to districts farthest from adequacy. This is not about taking
resources away from Chicago. This is about making historic changes to help poor
children in Chicago and throughout the state of Illinois.

Moreover,
the pension provisions in SB1 tack on last-minute additions to a formula never
designed to solve a pension crisis. CPS’ pension crisis should be resolved in
a separate forum that also addresses statewide pension reform. To move toward
treating all school districts in the state the same, this amendatory veto
continues to fund CPS’ normal pension costs but shifts that funding out of the
school funding formula. This ensures that new money going into the formula can
achieve the stated goals of going first to the districts that need it most.

A
number of changes to this bill are needed to return PK-12 funding reform to the
original spirit of the Commission and its commitment to promote equity and
adequacy statewide. The first change will maintain a per-district hold harmless
until the 2020-2021 school year and then move to a per-pupil hold harmless
based on a three-year rolling average of enrollment. The second change will
remove the minimum funding requirement; while I am committed to ensuring that
the legislature satisfies its duty to fund schools, the proposed trigger of one
percent of the overall adequacy target plus $93 million artificially inflates
the minimum funding number and jeopardizes Tier II funding. The third change
will remove the Chicago block grant from the funding formula. The fourth
change will remove both Chicago Public Schools pension considerations from the
formula: the normal cost pick-up and the unfunded liability deduction. The
fifth change will reintegrate the normal cost pick-up for Chicago Public
Schools into the Pension Code where it belongs, and will finally begin to treat
Chicago like all other districts with regards to the State’s relationship with
its teachers’ pensions. The sixth change will Eliminate the PTELL and TIF
equalized assessed value subsidies that allow districts to continue under-reporting
property wealth. The seventh change will remove the escalators throughout the
bill that automatically increase costs. The eighth change removes the
accounting for future pension cost shifts to districts in the Adequacy Target.
This provision would prevent districts from ever fully taking responsibility
for the normal costs of their teachers’ pensions. The final change will retain
the floor for the regionalization factor, for the purposes of equity, and will
add a cap, for the purposes of adequacy.

The
changes recommended here and the adoption thereof would transform our great
state’s ability to provide an equitable and adequate education for all
children.

On page 3, by replacing lines 8 through 10 with:
“formula, provided for in Section 18-8 of the School
Code, until such time as all economic”; and

On page 17, by replacing
lines 1 and 2 with the following:

“Section 17. The Illinois
Pension Code is amended by changing Sections 16-158 and 17-127 as
follows:"; and

On page 32, immediately after
line 24, by inserting the following:

“(40 ILCS 5/17-127) (from Ch.
108 1/2, par. 17-127)

Sec. 17-127. Financing;
revenues for the Fund.

(a) The revenues
for the Fund shall consist of: (1) amounts paid into the Fund by contributors
thereto and from employer contributions and State appropriations in accordance
with this Article; (2) amounts contributed to the Fund by an Employer; (3)
amounts contributed to the Fund pursuant to any law now in force or hereafter
to be enacted; (4) contributions from any other source; and (5) the earnings on
investments.

(b) The General
Assembly finds that for many years the State has contributed to the Fund an
annual amount that is between 20% and 30% of the amount of the annual State
contribution to the Article 16 retirement system, and the General Assembly
declares that it is its goal and intention to continue this level of
contribution to the Fund in the future.

(c) Beginning in
State fiscal year 1999 and ending at the end of State fiscal year 2017,
the State shall include in its annual contribution to the Fund an additional
amount equal to 0.544% of the Fund's total teacher payroll; except that this
additional contribution need not be made in a fiscal year if the Board has
certified in the previous fiscal year that the Fund is at least 90% funded,
based on actuarial determinations. These additional State contributions are
intended to offset a portion of the cost to the Fund of the increases in
retirement benefits resulting from this amendatory Act of 1998.

(d) In addition
to any other contribution required under this Article, the State shall
contribute to the Fund the following amounts:

(1)
For State fiscal year 2018, the State shall contribute $221,300,000.

(2) Beginning in
State fiscal year 2019, the State shall contribute for each fiscal year an
amount to be determined by the Fund, equal to the employer normal cost for that
fiscal year for all teachers hired before the implementation date of the plan
created under Section 1-161 of the Illinois Pension Code for the retirement
system under Article 16 or before the resolution or
ordinance date under Section 1-162 of the Illinois Pension Code for the
retirement System under Article 17, whichever is earlier, plus the amount
allowed pursuant to paragraph (3) of Section 17-142.1, to defray health
insurance costs for all employees. The amount contributed under this paragraph
(2) shall be reduced by the employer normal cost of the increase in benefits
associated with the portion of salary in excess of the amount of the salary set
for the Governor.

(e)
The Board shall determine the amount of State contributions required for each
fiscal year on the basis of the actuarial tables and other assumptions adopted
by the Board and the recommendations of the actuary. On or before November 1 of
each year, beginning November 1, 2017, the Board shall submit to the State
Actuary, the Governor, and the General Assembly a proposed certification of the
amount of the required State contribution to the Fund for the next fiscal year,
along with all of the actuarial assumptions, calculations, and data upon which
that proposed certification is based. On or before January 1 of each year,
beginning January 1, 2018, the State Actuary shall issue a preliminary report
concerning the proposed certification and identifying, if necessary,
recommended changes in actuarial assumptions that the Board must consider
before finalizing its certification of the required State contributions.

(f) On or
before January 15, 2018 and each January 15 thereafter, the Board shall certify
to the Governor and the General Assembly (i) the amount of the required State
contribution for the next fiscal year and (ii) the amount by which the required
State contribution was reduced pursuant to paragraph (2) of subsection (d) of
this Section. The certification shall include a copy of the actuarial
recommendations upon which it is based and shall specifically identify the
Fund's projected employer normal cost for that fiscal year. The Board's
certification must note any deviations from the State Actuary's recommended
changes, the reason or reasons for not following the State Actuary's
recommended changes, and the fiscal impact of not following the State Actuary's
recommended changes on the required State contribution. For the purposes of
this Article, including issuing vouchers, and for the purposes of subsection
(h) of Section 1.1 of the State Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation Act, the
State contribution specified for State fiscal year 2018 shall be deemed to have
been certified, by operation of law and without official action by the Board or
the State Actuary, in the amount provided in subsection (d) of this Section.

(g) Beginning
in State fiscal year 2018 on the 15th day of each month, or as soon thereafter
as may be practicable, the Board shall submit vouchers for payment of State
contributions to the Fund, in a total monthly amount of one-twelfth of the required
annual State contribution under subsection (d). These vouchers shall be paid by
the State Comptroller and Treasurer by warrants drawn on the funds appropriated
to the Fund for that fiscal year. If in any month the amount remaining
unexpended from all other State appropriations to the Fund for the applicable
fiscal year is less than the amount lawfully vouchered under this subsection,
the difference shall be paid from the Common School Fund under the continuing
appropriation authority provided in Section 1.1 of the State Pension Funds
Continuing Appropriation Act.

(a) There is
hereby appropriated from the General Revenue Fund to the General Assembly
Retirement System, on a continuing monthly basis, the amount, if any, by which
the total available amount of all other appropriations to that retirement
system for the payment of State contributions is less than the total amount of
the vouchers for required State contributions lawfully submitted by the
retirement system for that month under Section 2-134 of the Illinois Pension
Code.

(b) There is
hereby appropriated from the General Revenue Fund to the State Universities
Retirement System, on a continuing monthly basis, the amount, if any, by which
the total available amount of all other appropriations to that retirement
system for the payment of State contributions, including any deficiency in the
required contributions of the optional retirement program established under
Section 15-158.2 of the Illinois Pension Code, is less than the total amount of
the vouchers for required State contributions lawfully submitted by the retirement
system for that month under Section 15-165 of the Illinois Pension Code.

(c) There is
hereby appropriated from the Common School Fund to the Teachers' Retirement
System of the State of Illinois, on a continuing monthly basis, the amount, if
any, by which the total available amount of all other appropriations to that
retirement system for the payment of State contributions is less than the total
amount of the vouchers for required State contributions lawfully submitted by
the retirement system for that month under Section 16-158 of the Illinois
Pension Code.

(d) There is
hereby appropriated from the General Revenue Fund to the Judges Retirement
System of Illinois, on a continuing monthly basis, the amount, if any, by which
the total available amount of all other appropriations to that retirement
system for the payment of State contributions is less than the total amount of
the vouchers for required State contributions lawfully submitted by the
retirement system for that month under Section 18-140 of the Illinois Pension
Code.

(e) The
continuing appropriations provided by subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) of
this Section shall first be available in State fiscal year 1996. The
continuing appropriations provided by subsection (h) of this Section shall first
be available as provided in that subsection (h).

(f) For State
fiscal year 2010 only, the continuing appropriations provided by this Section
are equal to the amount certified by each System on or before December 31,
2008, less (i) the gross proceeds of the bonds sold in fiscal year 2010 under
the authorization contained in subsection (a) of Section 7.2 of the General
Obligation Bond Act and (ii) any amounts received from the State Pensions Fund.

(g) For State
fiscal year 2011 only, the continuing appropriations provided by this Section
are equal to the amount certified by each System on or before April 1, 2011,
less (i) the gross proceeds of the bonds sold in fiscal year 2011 under the
authorization contained in subsection (a) of Section 7.2 of the General
Obligation Bond Act and (ii) any amounts received from the State Pensions Fund.

(h) There is
hereby appropriated from the Common School Fund to the Public School Teachers'
Pension and Retirement Fund of Chicago, on a continuing monthly basis, the amount,
if any, by which the total available amount of all other State appropriations
to that Retirement Fund for the payment of State contributions under subsection
(d) of Section 17-127 of the Illinois Pension Code is less than the total
amount of the vouchers for required State contributions lawfully submitted by
the Retirement Fund for that month under that Section 17-127.”; and

On page 45, by replacing lines 12 through 14 with:
“formula under Section 18-8 of the School Code until
all economic development projects costs have”

"Organizational Unit CWI" is determined
by calculating the CWI in the region and original county in which an
Organizational Unit's primary administrative office is located as set forth in
this paragraph, provided that if the Organizational Unit CWI as calculated in
accordance with this paragraph is less than 0.9, the Organizational Unit CWI
shall be increased to 0.9, and provided that if the Organizational Unit CWI as
calculated in accordance with this paragraph is greater than 1.04, the
Organizational Unit CWI shall be decreased to 1.04. Each county's current CWI
value shall be”;
and

On page 338, by deleting line 16 through
20; and

On page 339, by deleting lines 16 through
17; and

On page 349, by replacing line 22
with: “each investment.”

By deleting lines 23 on page 349
through line 15 on page 350; and

On page 352, by replacing
line 6 with : “Essential Elements, the State Superintendent shall”; and

On page 353, by
replacing lines 10 and 11 with: “following
salaries shall be used:”; and

On page 353, by deleting
lines 16 through 18; and

On page 354, by replacing line 22
with: “Adjusted EAV by its”; and

On page 356, by deleting lines
16 through 24; and

By deleting line 24 on page 359
through line 15 on page 360; and

By deleting line 12 on page 361 through line 13
on page 362; and

On page 363, by replacing
line 4 with “$13,121,600.”; and

By deleting line 5 on page
363 through line 12 on page 364; and

On page 364, by replacing
line 13 with: “For Specially Funded Units, the Base Funding”; and

On page 364, by replacing
line 17 with: “(2) For the 2018-2019 school year through the 2019-2020
school year, the Base”; and

On page 364, immediately
after line 21, by inserting the following:

“(3) Beginning with the
2020-2021 school year and every school year thereafter, the Base Funding
Minimum of an Organizational Unit shall be the sum of (i) the Evidence-Based
Funding for the prior school year and (ii) the Base Funding Minimum for the
prior school year divided by the Organizational Unit's ASE for the prior school
year multiplied by the Organizational Unit's ASE for the current school year.
For Specially Funded Units, the Base Funding Minimum shall be the sum of (i)
the Evidence-Based Funding for the prior school year and (ii) the Base Funding
Minimum for the prior school year.”; and

On page 367, by replacing lines 6 through 7 with the
following:

“to one minus the
Organizational Unit’s Local Capacity Percentage. Each Organizational Unit
within Tier 3 or Tier 4”

By deleting line 3 on page 370 through line 1 on page 371;
and

On page 371, by replacing line 2 with the following:

“(9) In the event of a decrease in the amount
of the”

On
page 371, by replacing line 25 with the following:

“(10)
The State Superintendent shall make minor adjustments”

With
these changes, Senate Bill 1 will have my approval. I respectfully request your
concurrence.